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To the woman I saw today who wept in her car

By Bianca Lynne Spriggs

Woman,
I get it.
We are strangers,
but I know the heart is a hive
and someone has knocked yours 
from its high branch in your chest
and it lays cracked and splayed,
spilling honey all over
the ground floor of your gut
and the bees inside
that you've trained
over the days and years
to stay put, swarm
the terrain of your organs,
yes,
right here in traffic,
while we wait for the light to change.

I get it.
How this array of metal and plastic
tends to go womb room
once the door shuts,
and maybe you were singing
only moments before
you got the call,
or remembered that thing
you had tucked back and built
such sturdy scaffolding all around,
and now here it comes to knock
you adrift with only your steering
wheel to hold you up.

Or, maybe today
was just a tough day
and the sunlight
and warm weather
and blossoming limbs
and smiling pedestrians
waiting for their turn to cross
are much too much to take
when you think of all that’s left
to do, and here you are,
a reed stuck in the mud
of a rush hour intersection,
with so very many hours left to go.

Woman,
I know you.
I know how that thing
when left unattended
will show up as a typhoon
at your front door
demanding to be let in
or it will take
the whole damn house with it.

I know this place too.
I get it.

But because we are strangers,
because you did not see me see you,
my gaze has no more effect
than a phantom that stares at the living.
And yet, I want you to know that
today, in the hive of my heart,
there is room enough
for you.


 

 

Listen as Bianca Lynne Spriggs reads
To the woman I saw today who wept in her car."

Added: Tuesday, October 2, 2018  /  Used with permission.
Bianca Lynne Spriggs

Bianca Lynne Spriggs, Ph.D., is an award-winning writer and multidisciplinary artist from Kentucky. An Assistant Professor of English at Ohio University, Bianca is the author of five collections of poems, including Black Mermaid (Argus House Press, 2018), and the co-editor of three poetry anthologies, including Black Bone: 25 Years of the Affrilachian Poets (University of Kentucky Press, 2018). You can learn more about her work at her website.

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